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Confessions of the University of Chicago

FAQ

Is this art?

Opinions vary. I’ve heard people say yes (often with the caveat that the graffiti itself isn’t art, but my photographs of the graffiti are art), I’ve heard people say no, I’ve heard people accuse me of encouraging the most heinous act of property crime.

Personally, it’s a discussion I hate getting into, and I’m thoroughly sick of having it, but for the record, here’s my take on it: if there’s anything here that’s “art”, it’s the original graffiti. None of the pictures I’ve taken of the graffiti contribute to the subject matter in any way. Frankly, a lot of them are objectively bad photos (slightly blurry, too dark, weird contrast, etc.) The point in taking them wasn’t to make art, but to capture the contents. I take plenty of photos I’d be willing to label “art”– you can find what I consider the best of my photo collection here– but I think that calling the graffiti photos “art” cheapens the word.

What was the first piece of graffiti you photographed?

Is writing in the library a tradition?

Nope. Graffiti just happens. There are some places on campus where writing graffiti is a tradition; one of these days I’ll write a blog post about them.

What’s the deal with the title? And ‘graffiti’ isn’t a Latin word!

Early on, I decided to title the book using a spin-off of the University of Chicago motto, which can be loosely translated as “Let knowledge grow from more to more; and so be human life enriched.” As I was documenting the graffiti, I felt my own life was enriched by graffiti “growing from more to more” on the library walls, and I wanted to convey that in the book title. Unfortunately, I soon discovered that commonly cited “Latin” words for graffiti were all back-formations from Italian. Seeing as there was no attested Latin word for graffiti, and I felt like a paraphrasing (“writing on the wall”) would make the title too long, I settled for using the English word.

When did you do this?

When my office was in the Regenstein Library, I had access to the building before it officially opened to students– which made the stacks and study cubicle photos much less awkward to take. People look at you really funny if they see you lurking around the stacks or study areas with a camera. So, those photos I took before work. The A-level is more crowded before the library opens, so I’d generally take my “lunch” break around 10:30 AM and head down to the A-level when there were fewer people. No work productivity was harmed in the making of this book.

I wrote one of these, or know who wrote one!

I’d love to hear from you. I included in the Acknowledgements & Thanks section in the book the graffiti artists I’ve heard from after they read about this project. The Thanks section of this web site contains a more up-to-date list of graffiti artists.

Have you ever written on the Regenstein walls?

No, though this piece of graffiti really made me want to write something encouraging. I doodled the cover art on a wall in my bedroom.

I dislike Frankenstein – there’s something disarmingly straightforward about this one. There’s no hyperbole (it’s not “Frankenstein is ruining my life”), there’s no claim of intellectual superiority (it’s not “Mary Shelley is stupid, she failed miserably“). The writer just doesn’t like Frankenstein.

Russian graffiti: “One test and one essay and I happened” – Sorta philosophical if you take it at face value. Sorta cringeworthy when you realize she meant “and I’m done”. I’m hoping she’s only taken first-year Russian. I recently learned that the author is most likely a heritage speaker friend of mine, who wrote this at the beginning of her first year of college. After taking one year of Russian, she went from “happening” at the end of the quarter to being a fully literate Russian speaker, and today she’s pursuing a PhD in Russian literature at a top-notch university. So there’s a happy ending to this one.

Did you get this idea from the 2004 Scav Hunt item #80: “Brain Farts: The Collected Works of the University of Chicago Bathroom Graffiti”?

I never did (or followed) Scav Hunt as an undergrad, and only heard about that item in a Chicago Weekly blog post about my graffiti project. For what it’s worth, none of the graffiti here is from the bathrooms, but anyone interested in UofC graffiti really should check out Michael “mitcho” Erlewine’s PDF of the Pierce team’s submission. The “grout work” is a classic.